JQuery :: AJAX Calls Not Working On Local Computer / Fix It?
Jun 4, 2010
I'm trying to load a Javascript file which contains an array of data using .getScript(). It works fine on my server, but the request is never being made when I run it on my own computer, though the callback function is called. Is this an inherent limitation in JQuery/AJAX, or am I doing something stupid? code...
Is there any way one can retrieve the local IP Address of a computer? For example 192.168.0.1 as opposed to the internet connection IP address. Or is there a way to retrieve a unique identity of a computer using either PHP or javascript. Or any other sort of code?
what to do to retain values of a webpage even after saving the webpage on the local disk? i have developed my webpages in dreamweaver cs4 also my webpages are using opera 10.10 as default browser and one more thing i cant migrate it to any other browser.
I have several ajax calls that originates from the same page its updating. It works perfectly in firefox but in IE it works for about 18 requests and then just stops until the page is refreshed. I thought it was a cashe issue but I have added a variable for that. I think it may have something to do with binding but I am not sure how to sort that. This is one of my functions.
I'm trying to use the jqmodal dialog plugin and everything is working OK except for one minor problem. It seems when I click on the link, the expected action does not occur until I click the second time. Essentially I set up a small test form with a single line put into a table. In that data line is an href, which when clicked calls an AJAX function and returns text, which displays as a dialog. Like I said, this works fine except for the fact that the dialog does not show until the second time I click on the link. I added an alert box to the code, so I know the function is executed the first time the link is clicked
within this page that has been created, there is an AJAX tree folder which calls another page to be loaded into a DIV by AJAX again. Code:
[Code]...
I don't know why it doesn't work because the page has been loaded with the JS file, but as soon as the link is added afterwards it doesn't work. I take it this is because it doesn't know where to find the JS, but how can I overcome this?
i have a small (LAN only) web server running on my computer, and i would like to be able to make a web page in which i can run a program on the server computer from another compuer. say, for instance, i click a button on the web page running on the server, i want that action to run a .exe on the server. i came up with this code, but it doesn't run it server side, it runs it on the computer with the browser.
I'm experiencing a weird problem when trying to do a $.ajax call. When I pass 5 variables, with either GET or POST, the script runs as I would like. However, when I use 6 or more variables, the script does not run. Does anyone know why this is?
Relevant code (stops1-5 are defined as JS variables earlier in my script, and the alerts are for testing)
So, the way it is now, it works fine (I get the first alert for each instance of .barcrawl-stop-id, and get an alert at the end with the returned data). However, when I add another variable to the data, like stop4: stop4, the script does not run (all I see is one alert with "running ajax function").
I am a newbie to using jquery and have been exploring it developing a new app. At the moment I have a number of AJAX calls to the server which I have been queueing in an array and using a single $.ajax call to handle all of them. However I know about the browser limitations of two calls per page (at the same time and want to implement this to speed up page updating). To test concurrent ajax requests I have setup various asp pages to with delays 1sec, 5sec, 10sec etc etc. and a test html file with the follwing javascript
I know about the same-origin policy and that one of the only ways to load data from a cross-domain is to load it as JSON. However, all I am trying to do is access data from a server on another port (which I believe the browser still treats as cross-domain). I need to do this because the server my application is on is a map server and the other server (Apache) is the only one that can handle php scripts. I have also tried out the plug-in from [URL] and while it works when I do $('#phpContent').load('http://www.google.com'); it doesn't work when I try $('#phpContent').load('http://localhost:80/mapScripts/getFiles.php'); I have also tried$.get('http://localhost:80/mapScripts/getFiles.php', function(data) { $('#phpContent').html(data); });
So here I am breaking my brain and do not know what else to attempt.
I am developing quite a complex user interface in jQuery that relies on an AJAX call to retrieve JSON.We have noticed that the code runs slow in IE7. IE8 and IE6 are acceptable. Firefox and Chrome really quick. I have traced the problem back to the AJAX call, which IE7 seems slow o process. What takes less than a second in the other browsers will take IE7 3 or 4. I have googled for an answer it seems there is some consensus that the native XHR in IE7 is slow, so it may not be a specific jQuery problem.Has anyone else experienced this? Does anyone have a solution? Please consider that this will be a public website, so the solution cannot involve altering settings on users' machines.
I have a jquery based system with ajax calls instead of page refreshes. Every time I return some ajax content, it replaces the content on the main div.
function execcmdcallback(data, textStatus, XMLHttpRequest) { $("#divmain").html(data); data = null; }
Each time this executes, the browser memory increases by about 600-900kb. Can anyone suggest a way of doing this where the old memory is freed so there is no significant increase in browser memory on each ajax call ?
I've studied this a bit, [URL]..., but I have to admit I don't quite understand it I see the same issue on IE8, FF and Chrome. FF comsumes less memory per ajax call and frees some memory seconds later, but still the total working set is increasing on each call by 300k in FF and 600 to 900 in chrome and IE
Basically, what I am trying to do is call several ajax requests using jQuery on the same page, i know that all browsers are capable of requesting multiple requests. However in Chrome and Safari my website works fine, but IE, Firefox and Opera all only call the first request then dont call, the second two. I dont know why though?
I'm developing an asp.net MVC app, and decided to take advantage of JQuery's great datepicker using the following code in my master page:
[Code]...
My problem is that the alert block of code never fires. When I change it to occur before the datepicker code, the alert fires but the datepicker part won't work. What am I doing wrong here?
I want to be able to load content of multiple divs in just one click.And after the content has been loaded make a final call to a function on success.I'm using JQuery.when() wich works fine like this
I have a code that triggers ajax calls on button click, it all works fine but every now and then, the click triggers 2 AJAX calls. When i look at these calls in FB i see they succeeded (they get the expected response) but i get Timeout (I've set it to 3 seconds).
I want to send another ajax request when one request is in process to get the status of first request. If I call both the request the second request gets blocked till the completion of the first request.
I'm actually not sure if this isn't possible to begin with, but thought I should ask as it's better safe than sorry. On a number of my pages, I use jQuery.ajax() using the json data type. For example:
[Code]...
Would it be possible for people to execute this script from their own server? If yes, is there any preventative measures I can take to block any remote execution of the script? And, are there any other safety concerns I need to be aware of?
I've managed to use ajax to fetch and display the quotations which associate to a particular rep after i click that rep's name. But the only problem is the speed of response. The first few clicks are ok and very smooth. But after several tries, the response become slow and I cant even scroll down the webpage, and later on the web browser craches....
here it is:
<!-- Data display area --> <br /><input type="image" id="printbtn" value="Print" src="images/printer.png"/><br /> <div id="container">
I've noticed this weird behaviour of jQuery in Safari and Chrome (didn't test on Firefox as I'm using some webkit CSS extensions). After setting up the call like this:
If a timeout occurs (I switch the local webserver off), the 'success' method will be called! More than this in the textStatus parameter there is a string with "success" !!! The error handler doesn't even get called.... (As you may notice the only way I had to tell the problem, was to check the data param if it is null or 0 length. How can I avoid this?
I'm trying to build a page that has multiple ajax calls on it. When you do it the old-fashioned way with XmlHttpRequest, you'd create a new xhr object for every call so that they execute simultaneously. If I try to do this in jquery it will only execute a call when the previous one has completed. This makes the page load time completely unacceptable. How to improve the performance?
I'm currently rewriting all my ajax calls to use the jquery method (much cleaner code! ) and have declared a default ajaxError function, shown below:
$(document).ajaxError(function(event, request, settings){ alert("There was an error while communicating with the server. URL: " + settings.url); });
However, now I have a few ajax calls where I want to declare an error function in the ajax call. I was hoping that by declaring an error function in the ajax call, it would replace the default error call I have defined. But that does not appear to be the case, as I continue to first get my ajax function error call, then I also see the above code execute.
I tried calling event.stopImmediatePropagation() from within my ajax error function hoping that it would stop further events firing (ie: the default error event) but that didn't do anything except tell me in firefox that "event" was undefined.
I was hoping I wouldn't have to go through and define an error function to EVERY ajax call.